| Quarter | Letter Date | Fund Name | QTD | YTD | Tickers | Keywords/Themes | Theme Commentary | Pitches | Letter |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 Q4 | Dec 31, 2024 | Mairs & Power – Balanced Fund | - | 9.6% | FISV, LLY, MDT, MINN, UNH | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 29, 2026 | Hotchkis & Wiley Global Value Fund | 3.8% | 23.8% | AIG, BNP.PA, CMCSA, CRM, ELV, ERIC, FFIV, FISV, GEHC, GOOGL, UNH, USB, WBD, WDAY | AI, financials, global, healthcare, software, technology, valuation, value | The portfolio trades at 13x forward earnings and less than 10x normal earnings, representing attractive valuations relative to the broad market. The fund focuses on opportunities outside the Magnificent 7 where overall valuations remain near average despite elevated market multiples. The fund views AI as more likely to be a tailwind for application software vendors like Workday as they incorporate AI-powered features into their software suites. Google delivered strong new AI products that appear to be taking material share of Consumer Chatbot activity from OpenAI's ChatGPT. The fund has significant exposure to cloud-based enterprise software companies like Workday and Salesforce, which provide human capital management, financial management, and analytics solutions. These companies benefit from sticky customer bases and recurring revenue models. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 29, 2026 | Hotchkis & Wiley Large Cap Fundamental Value | 4.5% | 17.1% | AIG, APA, C, CMCSA, CRM, CRWD, CVS, ERIC, FDX, FFIV, FISV, GM, NFLX, PLTR, UNH, WBD, WDAY, WPP | banks, energy, financials, healthcare, large cap, software, valuation, value | The portfolio trades at 13x forward earnings and less than 10x normal earnings, both in line with historical averages. The manager emphasizes attractive valuations outside the Magnificent 7, with the S&P 500 excluding these stocks trading at 18x forward P/E versus a 35-year average of 17.4x. The fund focuses on undervalued quality businesses with strong fundamentals. Software is the portfolio's largest industry exposure on both absolute and relative basis. The manager views prospects of select software companies as highly compelling, citing sticky customer bases, recurring revenues, and predictable businesses. Major purchases included Workday and Salesforce, which trade at discounts to their own history despite being higher quality businesses. The portfolio's banks returned 13% compared to 6% for the index in Q4, with an average weight of 12% that returned nearly 40% for the year. The manager took capital out of the group as valuations increased. Banks were the top contributing industry to relative performance both quarterly and annually. The portfolio remains overweight in healthcare, noting the sector's return is about half that of the rest of the market over the past decade. Healthcare's P/E ratio is less than 80% of the broad market's P/E, trading at a deeper discount only 8% of the time since 1990. The manager views this as an attractive opportunity given the quality of businesses and growth prospects. Energy exposure spans both exploration & production companies as well as oilfield services. While these businesses are not as structurally attractive as software or healthcare, energy remains among the most attractively valued areas of the portfolio. The group trades at less than 7x normal earnings and offers an expected free cash flow yield of 11%. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 23, 2026 | GreensKeeper Value Fund | 0.0% | 0.0% | ADBE, AXP, BRK-B, CBOE, CFRUY, CHKP, ELV, FISV, GOOG, ICE, ICLR, LULU, MRK, NVO, SPGI, V, VRTX | AI, Concentration, Discipline, financials, Luxury, technology, value | The dominant narrative of 2025 was the market's evolving view of Alphabet's search business in an AI-first world. Alphabet aggressively transformed its research into consumer-ready products, deployed Gemini 3 which led key performance benchmarks, and launched AI Overviews within search. The company's proprietary Tensor Processing Units allowed efficient scaling while avoiding the Nvidia Tax. The fund maintains a disciplined value approach, refusing to abandon discipline simply because the market has become expensive. They deliberately prioritized capital preservation by trimming positions that reached price targets. The manager emphasizes that even wonderful businesses are not worth infinite prices and allocates capital elsewhere when valuations become stretched. Richemont's Jewelry Maisons continued to outperform the broader luxury market with stabilization of the Chinese consumer. The company maintained pricing integrity and brand stewardship, avoiding aggressive price hikes that peers used. This long-term thinking proved superior as luxury peers eroded brand value through discounting while Richemont maintained prestige. | ADBE ICLR NVO LULU FISV CFRUY AXP GOOG |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 21, 2026 | Renaissance Investment Management – Large Cap Growth | 0.0% | 0.0% | AMAT, BRO, BSX, CAH, FISV, FIX, GOOGL, LRCX, MSI, NFLX, NTNX, PEGA, RCL, SCHW, TPR, UBER, WM | AI, Equal Weight, growth, large cap, Mega Cap, semiconductors, technology, valuation | AI remains a key driver with mega-cap technology stocks leading market performance. Alphabet released Gemini 3 with performance exceeding expectations, making it the top-performing AI model, and unveiled new Tensor Processing Units for lower-cost AI computations. Applied Materials benefits from strong demand for AI semiconductor chipsets. Semiconductor equipment companies like Lam Research and Applied Materials are benefiting from secular tailwinds including transition to larger chip sizes and increased complexity in chip manufacturing to accommodate AI applications. The CHIPS Act provides federal stimulus supporting the sector. Market valuations have risen significantly with the cap-weighted S&P 500 P/E rising almost 60% over three years versus 30% for equal-weighted. The extreme valuation difference between mega-cap and equal-weighted stocks suggests better relative performance going forward from equal-weighted strategies. | NFLX AMAT GOOG |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 19, 2026 | Forager Australian Shares Fund | -1.9% | 24.8% | ARX.AX, BVS.AX, CAT.AX, CCL.AX, CRH, EML.AX, FISV, FIX, IEL.AX, INCH.L, INGA.AS, LNR.TO, MAH.AX, NUTX, NXT, NZX.NZ, OFX.AX, PLT.AX, PPS.AX, WISE.L, ZEG.L | Australia, dispersion, Mining, Quality, small caps, technology, Tourism, value | Small cap stocks significantly outperformed large caps in 2025, with the Small Ordinaries returning almost 25% versus 10% for the All Ordinaries. Small resources companies drove much of this outperformance with a 73% return, while small industrials delivered a more modest 9% return. Mining services investments like Macmahon benefited from enthusiasm for gold, silver and copper, with the company's share price almost doubling in 2025 after almost a decade of mediocre returns. New contracts for civil infrastructure acquisition Decmil position the company well for future revenue guidance. Australian tourism is finally showing signs of recovery with international arrivals hitting 97% of 2019 levels in recent months. Travel has historically grown at a multiple of GDP growth and there is still catching up to do. Tourism stocks remain very cheap on recovered earnings expectations. AI enthusiasm drove strong performance in tech-heavy indices, but also created concerns about software companies' competitive moats. The theory that AI diminishes software value through 'vibe coding' is one the manager is willing to bet against at the right price, particularly for established platforms with security and reliability advantages. Quality businesses with strong moats and decades of earnings growth suffered in 2025 as share prices had been growing faster than earnings. High multiples became problematic even for the best businesses, resulting in years of no returns while earnings catch up or significant derating if both earnings and multiples come into question. | MAH AU PLT AU OFX AU ARX AU |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 19, 2026 | Forager International Shares Fund | -2.0% | 15.0% | AUTO.L, BKNG, CRH, CRM, FISV, FIX, FLUT, G24.DE, INCH.L, INGA.AS, IT, LNR.TO, NUTX, NXT, PSI.TO, REA.AX, SES.MI, WISE.L, XRO.AX, ZEG.L | AI, global, Quality, small caps, technology, Travel, value | AI companies' insatiable demand for data centres and power generation led to significant returns for heating and cooling system installer Comfort Systems and solar equipment company Nextpower. Markets are increasingly questioning whether new AI-enabled competitors and solutions threaten the dominance of application software companies. The fund added three technology companies that have each halved over 2025 and hopes to add more. Many tech stocks had become expensive but recent falls present opportunities, though most still aren't cheap enough including Xero. International arrivals into Australia set post-Covid records in recent months, with August, September and October combined seeing arrivals hit 97% of 2019 levels. Travel has historically grown at a multiple of GDP growth and there is still catching up to do. Quality businesses with strong moats and decades of earnings growth suffered in 2025 as share prices had been growing faster than earnings. High multiples became a problem even for the best businesses, resulting in years of no returns or significant derating. | ARX AU ZEG LN NXT NUTX FISV |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Vulcan Value Partners – Small Cap | 3.2% | 9.5% | CBRE, CRM, CSGP, FISV, GOOGL, ITRN, KMX, MC.PA, MEDP, MSFT, QRVO, RE, RI.PA, RYAN, SSNC, STLA, SW.PA, SWKS, TRU, UNH | AI, discount, insurance, Quality, small cap, value | Manager emphasizes value investing discipline, focusing on companies trading at substantial discounts to intrinsic value. Small Cap portfolio has weighted average price to value ratio in mid-50s, representing significant margin of safety in current environment. Artificial Intelligence is disrupting numerous businesses similar to the Internet in the 1990s. AI stocks accounted for approximately 61% of S&P 500 returns in 2025, creating market concentration risks reminiscent of dot-com era. Small Cap returns have lagged Large Cap for extended period, creating attractive opportunities. Manager notes sell-side coverage is sparse and segment is ignored and unloved, often indicating good allocation timing. Portfolio includes more insurance-related businesses including Everest Group reinsurance and Ryan Specialty excess and surplus insurance broker. These companies offer attractive risk-adjusted returns and capital allocation opportunities. | ITRN EG |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Ariel Appreciation Fund | 3.0% | 11.1% | CRL, FDS, FISV, GNRC, GNTX, IPG, MSGE, OMC, SPHR | Automotive, Biotechnology, Data centers, Entertainment, Financial Services, mid cap, technology, value | Artificial intelligence continues to drive structural trends contributing to productivity gains and shifting competitive positioning across industries. However, the benefits are unevenly distributed, reinforcing market leadership narrowness and raising questions about performance durability. Live entertainment shows strong consumer demand with Sphere Entertainment's success with The Wizard of Oz and Madison Square Garden Entertainment's robust concert and Christmas Spectacular performance. The sector benefits from continued demand for live experiences and valuable real estate assets. Charles River Laboratories maintains its leadership position in outsourced drug development services despite moderated biotech funding and big pharma budget pressures. The company's scale and capabilities position it well for recovery as nonclinical testing remains essential for pipeline replenishment. Generac Holdings sees significant long-term growth potential in the data center market, benefiting from rising energy needs and artificial intelligence infrastructure expansion. This represents a key growth driver alongside traditional backup power solutions. | OMC FDS GNRC FISV MSGE CRL SCHR |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Parnassus Core Equity Fund | 1.6% | 11.6% | AAPL, AMAT, AMD, AZO, BALL, BRO, CRM, DHR, EFX, FISV, GOOGL, HD, KLAC, LIN, LLY, MSFT, ORCL, TMO, VRTX, WDAY | AI, growth, healthcare, large cap, Quality, semiconductors, technology, value | The fund views AI as a generational demand driver creating durable need for faster, more powerful and energy-efficient computing. They are likely in the early stages of a decade-long AI investment cycle, seeking upside capture while managing risks of rapid technological change, rising competition and growing financial leverage. The gap will widen between AI winners versus AI losers, favoring active portfolio management. The fund maintains exposure to semiconductor companies benefiting from AI-driven demand. Applied Materials and KLA gained from sustained AI-driven semiconductor demand with improving customer outlooks. The portfolio includes semiconductor manufacturing equipment suppliers and chip designers positioned for the AI infrastructure build-out. The fund invests in hyperscalers and cloud infrastructure companies. Alphabet showed improving growth in its cloud segment and renewed confidence in its vertically integrated AI strategy. The portfolio includes companies providing cloud services and infrastructure supporting the AI transformation. The fund holds pharmaceutical companies like Eli Lilly, which rebounded sharply as concerns around pricing, penetration and competitive dynamics for GLP-1 weight-loss drugs eased following stronger-than-expected demand data. The portfolio favors companies that continue to innovate to improve patient outcomes. The fund invests in life science tools companies such as Danaher and ThermoFisher that provide valuable equipment and services for clinical research. These companies benefited from improving sentiment around life sciences end markets as pharmaceutical customers signaled higher-than-expected spending on research and development. | View |
| Date | Pitch Type | Author | Company | Industry | Sub Industry | Bull / Bear | Stock Exchange | Keywords | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 21, 2026 | Fund Letters | Christopher R. Pavese | Fiserv, Inc. | Financials | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Bear | New York Stock Exchange | Competition, Execution, Fintech, Governance, Payments | View Pitch |
| Feb 4, 2026 | Fund Letters | David A.Katz | Fiserv, Inc. | Financials | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Neutral | New York Stock Exchange | earnings, Execution, management, Payments, Risk | View Pitch |
| Feb 2, 2026 | Seeking Alpha | Seeking Alpha | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Data Processing & Outsourced Services | Neutral | NASDAQ Stock Market | client value, digital payments, financial technology, leadership changes, market position, payment processing, recurring revenue, Strategic Transformation, technology investments | View Pitch |
| Feb 2, 2026 | Seeking Alpha | Seeking Alpha | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Data Processing & Outsourced Services | Neutral | NASDAQ Stock Market | client value, digital payments, financial technology, market position, payment processing, recurring revenue, Strategic realignment, technology investments | View Pitch |
| Jan 29, 2026 | Fund Letters | Brad Slingerlend | Fiserv Inc. | Information Technology | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Bear | New York Stock Exchange | durability, exit, Fintech, Management Reset, Payments | View Pitch |
| Jan 29, 2026 | Fund Letters | David M. Poppe | Fiserv Inc. | Information Technology | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | cashflow, Fintech, Payments, recurring revenue, switching costs | View Pitch |
| Jan 27, 2026 | Fund Letters | Michael McCloskey | Fiserv Inc. | Information Technology | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Bear | New York Stock Exchange | Earnings-quality, management, Payments, turnaround, valuation | View Pitch |
| Jan 23, 2026 | Fund Letters | Rich Eisinger | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Data Processing & Outsourced Services | Bear | New York Stock Exchange | Execution, Growthreset, Payments | View Pitch |
| Jan 21, 2026 | Fund Letters | C.T. Fitzpatrick | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | Capital reinvestment, Free Cash Flow, Management Transition, Payments, recurring revenue | View Pitch |
| Jan 21, 2026 | Fund Letters | Sebastian Lyon | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Data Processing & Outsourced Services | Bear | New York Stock Exchange | earnings reset, Execution, exit, Governance, Payments | View Pitch |
| Jan 21, 2026 | Fund Letters | David Hoeft | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Data Processing & Outsourced Services | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | Fintech, Margins, Payments, turnaround, valuation | View Pitch |
| Jan 20, 2026 | Fund Letters | Charles K. Bobrinskoy | Fiserv, Inc. | Financials | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | digital payments, Fintech, recurring revenue, scale, switching costs | View Pitch |
| Jan 20, 2026 | Fund Letters | Steve Johnson | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Transaction & Payment Processing Services | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | management, Payments, rerating, turnaround, valuation | View Pitch |
| Jan 20, 2026 | Fund Letters | John W. Rogers | Fiserv, Inc. | Information Technology | Data Processing & Outsourced Services | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | Execution, Fintech, Payments, recurring revenue, Switchingcosts | View Pitch |
| Dec 6, 2025 | Fund Letters | David M. Poppe | Fiserv Inc. | Other | - | Bull | NYSE | Banks, growth, Payments, Terminals, valuation | View Pitch |
| Nov 29, 2025 | Fund Letters | C.T. Fitzpatrick | Fiserv Inc. | Other | Financial Technology | Bull | NASDAQ | buybacks, compounding, Fintech, Payments, recurring revenue | View Pitch |
| Nov 29, 2025 | Fund Letters | Daniel Gladiš | Fiserv Inc. | Other | Financial Technology | Bull | NASDAQ | Digital, Fintech, infrastructure, Merchant, Payments, recurring revenue | View Pitch |
| Nov 29, 2025 | Fund Letters | Cornelius Zeeman | Fiserv Inc. | Other | Data Processing & Outsourced Services | Bear | NASDAQ | diversification, Fintech, growth, guidance, Integration, Merchant, Payments, valuation | View Pitch |
| Nov 29, 2025 | Fund Letters | John W. Rogers | Fiserv Inc. | Other | Financial Technology | Bull | NASDAQ | buybacks, Digital, Fintech, growth, Payments, SMB, Software | View Pitch |
| Nov 29, 2025 | Fund Letters | Charles K. Bobrinskoy | Fiserv Inc. | Other | Financial Technology | Bull | NASDAQ | Digital, Fintech, growth, Margins, Payments, recurring revenue, technology | View Pitch |
| Manager Name | Fund Name | Fund AUM | Invested Value | Portfolio Weight | Shares Owned | Shares Bought / Sold During Quarter | % Bought / Sold During Quarter | % of Shares Outstanding Owned |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No investor data available. | ||||||||